The panic inside California’s Democratic establishment was real. For weeks, party leaders whispered about a nightmare: two Republicans on the November ballot, and no Democrat in the governor’s race at all. Tonight, that fear shattered. Xavier Becerra has broken through the chaos, survived the scandals swirling around the field, and locked in a November
Xavier Becerra’s breakthrough instantly reshapes California’s political landscape. His advance guarantees Democrats a foothold in November, ending weeks of dread that internal fractures might hand Republicans a historic opening. Becerra arrives with scars: years of partisan battles in Washington, bruising attacks over his record, and the shadow of staff misconduct that opponents eagerly weaponized. Yet his campaign leaned hard into experience, arguing that California’s overlapping crises demand a steady, battle-tested hand rather than another untested celebrity or rising star who flames out under scrutiny.
Now, all eyes shift to the unresolved second spot. Whether he faces Trump-aligned Steve Hilton or deep-pocketed activist Tom Steyer, Becerra enters the general election as the favorite in a state that hasn’t elected a Republican governor in twenty years. But the messy primary exposed Democratic vulnerabilities—and a restless electorate—that he cannot ignore as he fights to turn survival into victory.